The 2026 F1 European Season: Every Race
The European stretch runs from early June to mid-September. Here’s each round in order, with its country, circuit, and date, plus a connectivity note for travelling fans.
Monaco Grand Prix — Monaco
Circuit de Monaco · 5–7 June
The European leg opens with its most glamorous and most demanding street circuit. Monaco is tiny and packed, which means cellular networks around the harbour and grandstands get heavily congested during sessions. A reliable data connection helps with navigating the principality’s tight streets and coordinating in dense crowds, public Wi-Fi here is rarely dependable when tens of thousands of fans are connected at once.
Spanish Grand Prix — Barcelona, Spain
Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya · 12–14 June
In its final year on the calendar under the Barcelona title, the Catalunya circuit sits just outside the city in Montmeló. Most fans base themselves in Barcelona and commute out, so data for trains, maps, and ticketing is essential across the weekend.
Austrian Grand Prix — Spielberg, Austria
Red Bull Ring · 26–28 June
Set in the Styrian mountains, the Red Bull Ring is one of the most scenic stops of the year, and one of the more rural. Coverage is good around the circuit but can thin out in the surrounding countryside, so a plan with solid Austrian network access matters if you’re camping or staying in nearby villages.
British Grand Prix — Silverstone, Great Britain
Silverstone Circuit · 3–5 July
One of the largest crowds of the entire season descends on Silverstone, with attendance well into six figures across the weekend. Network congestion is a known issue here, particularly on race day. Mobile data is far more reliable than on-site Wi-Fi for live timing, meeting points, and getting out of the famous post-race traffic.
Belgian Grand Prix — Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium
Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps · 19 July
Spa is enormous, set in the Ardennes forest, and notorious for patchy coverage across its vast site. The circuit spans several kilometres of hilly terrain, so a strong data connection helps you navigate between grandstands and stay reachable when meeting friends across the venue.
Hungarian Grand Prix — Budapest, Hungary
Hungaroring · 26 July
The last race before the summer break, just outside Budapest. The city is a popular fan base with good urban coverage, and data is useful for the commute out to Mogyoród and for making the most of Budapest itself over the weekend.
After Hungary, F1 takes a three-week summer break before the season resumes.
Dutch Grand Prix — Zandvoort, Netherlands
Circuit Zandvoort · 21–23 August
2026 marks the final Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort, and it features a Sprint for the first time, so there’s even more on-track action to follow. The circuit sits right on the coast near a small seaside town, and the orange-clad crowds are huge. Reliable data is key for the busy train connections from Amsterdam and for the packed seaside village.
Italian Grand Prix — Monza, Italy
Autodromo Nazionale Monza · 6 September
The Temple of Speed, and F1’s only Italian round in 2026 after Imola left the calendar. Set in a royal park north of Milan, Monza draws passionate tifosi in enormous numbers. Most fans stay in or around Milan and travel up, so data for regional trains and navigation is essential.
Spanish Grand Prix (Madrid) — Madrid, Spain
Madring (IFEMA) · 13 September
The European season finale and the calendar’s biggest debut: a brand-new part-street circuit around Madrid’s IFEMA exhibition grounds. As a first-year urban venue, expect crowds, road closures, and heavy network demand. A dependable connection is especially valuable here for navigating a circuit layout no one has experienced before.
Why One eSIM Across the Whole F1 European Leg
Here’s the connectivity challenge laid out plainly. A fan following even part of this calendar passes through Monaco, Spain, Austria, the UK, Belgium, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Italy, eight or nine countries depending on the rounds you attend. Handling that with physical SIM cards means buying a new one in each country, or paying roaming rates that add up fast outside your home network.
A single regional eSIM covers the entire European leg on one plan. You activate it once, before you leave home, and your connection follows you from the harbour in Monaco to the streets of Madrid without a single SIM swap.